Policy lessons from the schoolyard
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Bradbury, Roger
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The Asia and the Pacific Policy Society
Abstract
Reflecting on his memories of growing up, Roger Bradbury wonders whether approaches to policy have changed much at all.
In the 1950s, Southport – where I grew up – was just a small Queensland coastal town subsisting on fishing, agriculture, forestry, and a bit of tourism. The town had not yet merged with its smaller neighbouring villages to form the Gold Coast. Life was quiet, provincial, and pleasant.
I attended Southport State School and accidentally learned some valuable lessons in policy, politics, and power there. I say accidental because any education in that school was a side effect of a system designed to produce a barely literate, compliant proletariat. But still, the insights I gained there stayed with me, and helped me understand how people use power and policy.
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Policy Forum : Asia and the Pacific Policy Society
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Free Access via publisher site
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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